Maurice Keen

His most famous work, Chivalry, remains the best general history to serve as an introduction to the topic. Nearly thirty years' work by historians and scholars of medieval literature has added a great deal to our understanding of the topic, but I am not aware of anyone who has brought the advances together into a form so solid, enlightening and useful. Whoever does is likely to stand heavily in his debt, as even now there is much in his work that cannot be improved upon.

You must climb up on to the keel,
cold is the sea-spray’s feel;
let not your courage bend:
here your life must end.
Old man, keep your upper lip firm
though your head be bowed by the storm.
You have had girls’ love in the past;
death comes to all at last.

2 comments:

Eric Blair
said...

I understand that, in "Monty Python and the Holy Grail", the 'famous historian' that gets ridden down by a knight (see here: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SOe4DVmlcKQ )is supposed to be based on Maurice Keen--both Terry Jones and Michael Palin were at Oxford, and Jones in particular likely studied under him.